American Civil War reenactment

American Civil War reenactment is an effort to recreate the appearance of a particular battle or other event associated with the American Civil War by hobbyists known (in the United States) as Civil War reenactors, or living historians.

Confederate reenactors fire their rifles during a reenactment of the Battle of Chancellorsville in May 2008.
Confederate artillery reenactors fire on U.S. soldier reenactors during a Battle of Chickamauga reenactment in Danville, Illinois.

Although most common in the United States, there are also American Civil War reenactors in Canada, the United Kingdom,[1] Germany,[2] Australia,[3] Italy,[4] Denmark,[5] Sweden, and Poland.[6]

History

Reenacting the American Civil War began even before the actual fighting had ended. American Civil War veterans recreated battles as a way to remember their fallen comrades and to teach others what the war was all about.[7] The Great Reunion of 1913, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, was attended by more than 50,000 Union and Confederate veterans, and included reenactments of elements of the battle, including Pickett's Charge.[8] Modern reenacting is thought to have begun during the 1961–1965 American Civil War Centennial commemorations.[9] Reenacting grew in popularity during the 1980s and 1990s, primarily due to the success of the 125th Anniversary reenactment near the original Manassas battlefield, which more than 6,000 reenactors attended.[10] That year, Time magazine estimated there were more than 50,000 reenactors in the U.S.[11]

In 1998, the 135th-anniversary reenactment of the Battle of Gettysburg occurred near the original battlefield. There have been several estimates of the number of participants. Still, it is widely agreed that it was the largest reenactment ever held anywhere in the world, with between 15,000 and 20,000 reenactors participating. About 50,000 spectators watched this event.[12]

Participation

Reenactment at the American Museum in Bath, England
Reenactor plays the fife at The Angle at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

American Civil War reenactments have drawn a fairly sizable following of enthusiastic participants, young and old, willing to brave the elements and expend money and resources to duplicate the events down to the smallest recorded detail. Participants may even attend classes by event sponsors where they learn how to dress, cook, eat, and even "die", just as real American Civil War soldiers would have. Most reenactments have anywhere from 100 to thousands of participants, portraying U.S.A. or C.S.A. infantry, artillery, or cavalry forces. Some people, though uncommon, may portray Engineers or Marines. The 135th anniversary Gettysburg reenactment (1998) is generally believed to be the most-attended reenactment, with attendance estimates ranging from 15,000[13] to over 20,000 reenactors.[14]

Reasons given for participating in such activities vary. Some participants are interested in getting a historical perspective on the turbulent times that gripped the nation, particularly if they can trace their ancestry back to those who fought in the war. In some cases, if there are not enough reenactors on one side, reenactors from the other side are asked to change sides, or "galvanize", for the day/event.[15]

Although many periods are reenacted worldwide, American Civil War reenactment is, by far, the most popular in the US.[16] In 2000, the number of Civil War reenactors was estimated at 50,000,[17] though the number of participants declined sharply through the ensuing decade, to around 30,000 in 2011.[18] Possible reasons for the decline include the cost of participating and the variety of other entertainment options.[18] The 150th anniversary of the war has regenerated interest and stimulated growth in the hobby. The number of reenactors steadily climbed to past levels.

Although women and children commonly participate in reenactments as civilians (portraying, for example, members of a soldiers' aid society), some women also take part in military portrayals. This is controversial within the reenactment community, although there are documented cases of women disguising their gender to fight in the war. Lee Taylor Middleton, the author of "Hearts of Fire: Soldier Women of the American Civil War", has documented hundreds of such female soldiers. DeAnne Blanton and Lauren M. Cook, authors of "They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War", document 240 soldiers in this work. DeAnne Blanton, a Senior Military Archivist at the National Archives in Washington, D.C., is updating her book and believes the number may be closer to seven hundred women. Almost all of the women did so disguised as men. Attitudes on this topic seem to vary widely. Some "hard-core" reenactment units will not admit women; others allow their presence if a real woman soldier is known to have fought in its real-life counterpart regiment; others admit anyone who wants to fight.[19]

Categories of reenactors

Reenactors are commonly divided (or self-divide) into three categories, based on the level of concern for authenticity.[16][20]

Farbs

Some, called "Farbs" or "polyester soldiers"[21] are reenactors who spend relatively little of their time or money maintaining authenticity concerning uniforms, accessories, or even period behavior. The 'Good Enough' attitude is pervasive among farbs, although even casual observers may be able to point out flaws. Blue jeans, tennis shoes, polyester (and other synthetic fabrics), zippers, velcro, snoods, baseball caps, and modern cigarettes are common issues.

The term "FARB" was commonly used during the Bicentennial Celebration of the Revolutionary War and stood for Far Off Resembles British, as a comment on the lack of authenticity of some of the groups who participated at that time. It became after that a statement as to the commitment of the authenticity of any group whose lack of attention to detail was apparent.

Mainstream

Another group of reenactors often is called "Mainstream." These reenactors are somewhere between farb and progressive. They are more common than either farbs or progressives.

Most mainstream reenactors try to appear authentic but may come out of character without an audience. Visible stitches are likely to be sewn in a period-correct manner, but hidden stitches and undergarments may not be period-appropriate. Food consumed before an audience is expected to be generally appropriate to the early 1860s but may not be seasonally and locally appropriate. Modern items are sometimes used "after hours" or in a hidden fashion. The typical attitude is to put on a good show, but that accuracy need only go as far as others can see.

Progressive

At the other end of the spectrum from farbs are "hardcore authentics" or "progressives", as they prefer to be called.[22] Sometimes derisively called "stitch counters",[23] many people have misconceptions about hardcore reenactors.[24]

Hardcore authentics generally seek an "immersive" reenacting experience, trying to live as much as possible as someone from the 1860s might have. This includes eating seasonally and regionally appropriate food, undergarments in a period-appropriate manner, and staying in character throughout an event.[25] The desire for an immersive experience often leads hardcore reenactors to smaller events and set up separate camps at larger events, which other reenactors often perceive as elitism.[26]

Character reenactors

Some reenactors portray a specific officer or person such as General Robert E. Lee, General Ulysses S. Grant, President Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, or a less well-known officer such as Col. Abram Fulkerson. Character reenactors may also portray a civilian man, woman, or child of significance. These reenactors often do not participate in the actual combat portion of the reenactment and serve as narrators to the audience during the battle. Often, character reenactors have extensively researched the person they portray and present a first-person narrative of his story.

Civilian reenactors

In addition to military reenactment, a significant part of American Civil War reenactment includes portraying civilians, including men, women, and children from infants to young adults. This can consist of portrayals as diverse as soldiers' aid societies, sutlers, saloon proprietors, musicians, and insurance salespeople.

Types of Civil War reenactments

Public events

A typical American Civil War reenactment occurs over a weekend, with the reenactors arriving on Friday and camping on site while spectators view the event on Saturday and Sunday. Usually, each reenactment is centered around a Saturday battle and Sunday battle (often, but not always, intended to recreate an actual battle from the American Civil War), in addition to many of the activities listed below. A traditional public reenactment is a three-day affair incorporating elements from the following categories.

Living histories

Living histories are meant entirely for the education of the public. Such events do not necessarily have a mock battle but instead are aimed at portraying the life, and more importantly, the lifestyle, of the average American Civil War soldier. This does include civilian reenacting, a growing trend. Occasionally, a spy trial is recreated, and a medic too. Warfare and cooking demonstrations, song and leisure activities, and lectures are more common. These should not, however, be confused with Living history museums. These outlets for living history utilize museum professionals and trained interpreters to convey the most accurate information available to historians.

Living history is the only reenactment permitted on National Park Service land; NPS policy "does not allow for battle reenactments (simulated combat with opposing lines and casualties) on NPS property."[27]

Public demonstrations

2014 public demonstration in a parade in Plainview, Minnesota

Public demonstrations are smaller mock battles by reenacting organizations or private parties to show the public how people in the 1860s lived and the public American Civil War battles. The battles are only loosely based on actual battles, if at all, and may consist of demonstrations of basic tactics and maneuvering techniques.

Scripted battles

Scripted battles are reenactments in the strictest sense; the battles are planned so that the companies and regiments take the same actions that were taken in the original battles. They are often fought at or near the battleground or a place similar to the original. Non-reenactors commonly question who "dies" throughout the battle. Reenactors commonly refer to being killed or wounded as "taking a hit" and are typically left up to the individual's discretion, although greatly influenced by the battle's events. Because most battles are based on their historical counterparts, it is generally understood when to begin taking hits and to what extent.[28]

Total immersion events

Total immersion events are made up solely of progressive ("hard-core authentic") reenactors, who often refer to them as "Events By Us and For Us" or "EBUFU". As the names imply, these events are held for the personal edification of the reenactors involved, allowing them to spend an extended time marching, eating, and generally living like actual soldiers of the American Civil War.[25] Total immersion events generally require participants to meet a high standard of authenticity. In most cases, little or none of the events will be open to public viewing.

Tactical battles

Tactical battles, which may or may not be open to the public,[29] are fought like real battles, with each side devising strategies and tactics to defeat their opponent(s). They have no script, a basic set of agreed-upon rules (physical boundaries, time limit, victory conditions, etc.), and onsite judges or referees, and so could be considered a form of live action role-playing game. Tactical battles might also be considered a form of experimental archaeology.[30]

Reenactment and media

Motion picture and television producers often turn to reenactment groups for support; films like Gettysburg, Glory, Field of lost shoes and Gods and Generals benefited greatly from the input of reenactors, who arrived on set fully equipped and steeped in knowledge of military procedures, camp life, and tactics.[31]

In a documentary about the making of the film Gettysburg, actor Sam Elliott, who portrayed U.S. Major General John Buford in the film, said of reenactors:

I think we're really fortunate to have those people involved. In fact, they couldn't be making this picture without them; there's no question about that. These guys come with their wardrobe, they come with their weaponry. They come with all the accoutrements, but they also come with the stuff in their head and the stuff in their heart.[32]

However, the relationship between reenactors and filmmakers has been contentious at times. Although reenactors for Gettysburg were unpaid, money was contributed on their behalf to a trust for historic preservation; however, some subsequent productions have offered no such compensation. Also, in some cases, reenactors have clashed with directors over one-sided portrayals and historical inaccuracies.[33] Some producers have been less interested in accuracy than in the sheer number of reenactors, which can result in safety issues. Finally, large film productions, like Gettysburg, can draw enough reenactors to cause the cancellation of other events.[34]

Tony Horwitz covered hardcore reenacting in Confederates In The Attic, released in 1998.[35]

On April 4, 2013, Jeffrey S. Williams released Muskets and Memories: A Modern Man's Journey through the Civil War, a mix of modern reenactment narrative with historical facts.[36]

In 2016, Justin Miller and John Paul Pacelli produced and directed a documentary called When To Die. It followed four Civil War reenactors and explored their relationship with the hobby.[37]

Talene Monahon's 2020 play How to Load a Musket, is about American Civil War reenactors.[38]

Incidents

In 1998, a reenactor at a Battle of Gettysburg recreation borrowed a handgun that contained a "squib" (a bullet lodged halfway down the barrel). Without having inspected the gun before loading the blank charge, the reenactor wounded another in the neck.[39][40][41]

Criticism

Author Jenny Thompson discusses in her book the "fantasy farb", or the tendency of reenactors to gravitate towards "elite" units such as commandos, paratroopers, or Waffen-SS units. This results in under-representation in the reenactment community of the most common types of military troops in the period being reenacted. The question has arisen among North American reenactors, but similar issues exist in Europe. For example, in Britain, a high proportion of Napoleonic War reenactors perform as members of the 95th Rifles (perhaps due to the popularity of the fictional character of Richard Sharpe), and medieval groups have an over-proportion of plate-armored soldiers.[42]

Some veterans have criticized military reenactment as glorifying 'what is literally a human tragedy.'[43] "'If they knew what a war was like', said one Second World War combat veteran, 'they'd never play at it'.[44] Further, some feminists have critiqued Civil War reenactment, arguing that it "builds up a prosthetic symbolic male white body, embedded in an archaic racialized gender system: the clothing and the tools normally intensify male whiteness. Thus, even if the outer appearance of the uniformed female reenactor is flawless, her participation is deemed unacceptable by most male reenactors."[45] Some reenactments more recently have allowed women to participate as combatants as long as their appearance can pass as male from a specified distance, or if they are representing a specific historical woman who fought in the American Civil War while cross-dressing as a man. Other units have allowed women to participate unconditionally.[19]

A final concern is that reenactors may be aligned with the political beliefs that some of the reenacted armies fought for, such as Nazism or the Confederate South. For example, U.S. politician Rich Iott's participation in a World War II reenactment in which he was in the group that portrayed the German 5th SS Panzer Division Wiking side excited media criticism during his 2010 Congressional campaign.[46] In 2017, in the weeks following a far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia at which a neo-Nazi killed a counterprotester, some reenactors complained about—as one reporter put it—"the co-opting of the [Civil] war by neo-Nazis."[47]

See also

Notes

  1. "The American Civil War Society" (PDF). ACWS Ltd. Retrieved 2014-09-24. More than 45,000 British citizens served during the American Civil War.
  2. "WBTS Forum". WBTS-forum.org. Archived from the original on 2013-06-01. Retrieved 2014-09-24.
  3. "62nd New York 'Anderson Zouaves' American Civil War Reenactment". The 62nd. Retrieved 2014-09-24.
  4. "Who We Are". 14th Louisiana Infantry Regiment and Company. Retrieved 2014-09-24.
  5. "American Civil War Reenactors of Denmark". Archived from the original on 2017-09-07. Retrieved 2017-05-27.
  6. "58th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment". Archived from the original on 2017-09-12. Retrieved 2017-09-12.
  7. Hadden, p. 4 "Civil War reenacting was done almost from the beginning of war, as soldiers demonstrated to family and friends their actions during the war, in camp, in drill, and in battle. Veterans organizations recreated camp life to show their children and others how they lived and to reproduce the camaraderie of shared experience with their fellow veterans."
  8. Heiser.
  9. Hadden. p 4 "Without a doubt, Civil War reenactment got its boost during the centennial, which also saw the birth of the North-South Skirmish Association (N-SSA)."
  10. Hadden, p. 6 "In 1986, the first of the 125th Anniversary battles was held near the original battlefield of Manassas. More than anything, this mega-event sparked an interest in the Civil War and reenacting."
  11. Skow.
  12. "Welcome to reenactor.net's Civil War time/area". reenactor.net. Archived from the original on 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2014-09-24.
  13. Hadden, p. 15.
  14. Stanton, p. 64.
  15. Hadden, p. 220.
  16. Strauss. "In the United States, hobby organizations participate in the public reenactment of historical events. The most popular is Civil War reenacting, which can be viewed as a manifestation of the unresolved nature of that war...Among reenactors, the quest for historical authenticity is considered a core value."
  17. "Massachusetts company still rolls out hardtack dough for Civil War enthusiasts". CNN. August 7, 2000. Archived from the original on 2008-03-07. Retrieved 2008-08-14. Word spread among roughly 50,000 Civil War buffs, and business boomed.
  18. Douban, Gigi (July 4, 2011), Fewer People Participate In Civil War Reenactments, National Public Radio, retrieved 2011-07-19
  19. "Women Military Reenactor's Homepage". Archived from the original on 2005-05-15. Retrieved 2009-10-29.
  20. Stanton, p. 34.
  21. Hadden p 209 and p 219.
  22. Hadden, p. 138.
  23. Hadden, p. 224.
  24. Hadden, p. 138 "The hard-core movement is often misunderstood and sometimes maligned."
  25. Hadden, p. 138 "Like soldiers of the Civil War, progressives experience the same poor conditions that the original soldiers did, camping without tents and sleeping out exposed to the cold and rain. They spend weekends eating bad and insufficient food and practice a steady regimen of work, marching, and drill. They suffer the cold, carrying insufficient clothing and blankets as well as sleeping campaign-style by spooning with each other for warmth."
  26. Hadden, p. 139.
  27. "Wilson's Creek National Battlefield FAQ". National Park Service. July 25, 2008.
  28. Farhi, Paul (July 15, 2011). "Civil War reenactment etiquette: How — and when — to die on the battlefield". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  29. Hadden, p. 224 "Sometimes they are closed events, in which the public is not invited to observe."
  30. Hadden, p. 23 "By living like the soldiers did, even for just a short time, the reenactors gain better understanding of how to wear the uniform and use the equipment."
  31. Details may be found in the "making of" features on the DVD versions of both films.
  32. This documentary can be found on the DVD of the film Gettysburg.
  33. Hadden, p. 7.
  34. Hadden, p. 8.
  35. Horwitz, Tony (February 22, 1999). Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War. Vintage. ISBN 978-0679758334.
  36. Williams, Jeffrey S. (April 4, 2013). Muskets and Memories: A Modern Man's Journey Through the Civil War. Antietam Creek Press. ISBN 978-0989042109.
  37. Miller, J., & Pacelli, J. P. (Producers). (2016). When To Die. Retrieved from https://www.whentodie.com/
  38. Soloski, Alexis (16 January 2020). "'How to Load a Musket' Review: A Play About Reenactors Gets Real". New York Times. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  39. "Investigation continues into shooting of Civil War re-enactor". The Observer-Reporter. Washington, PA. July 6, 1998.
  40. "Re-enactor heals from mysterious shot Suspect fired gun belonging to stranger". July 19, 1998.
  41. "Frenchman Pleads Guilty In Gettysburg Shooting". The New York Times. July 11, 1998.
  42. Thompson, Jenny, 1966- (2004). War games : inside the world of 20th-century war reenactors. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. ISBN 1-58834-128-3. OCLC 53483455.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  43. Lowenthal, David. (October 2015). The past is a foreign country - revisited (Revised and updated ed.). Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-521-85142-8. OCLC 825050398.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  44. "WCBS-TV News/New York Times Race Relations Poll, June 1988". ICPSR Data Holdings. 1990-05-01. doi:10.3886/icpsr09106. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
  45. Auslander, Mark (March 2013). "Touching the Past: Materializing Time in Traumatic "Living History" Reenactments". Signs and Society. 1 (1): 161–183. doi:10.1086/670167. ISSN 2326-4489. S2CID 191618828.
  46. "US Republican candidate Rich Iott in Nazi uniform row". BBC News. 2010-10-10. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
  47. Guarino, Mark (August 25, 2017). "Will Civil War reenactments die out?". The Washington Post.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.